| THE WHITE HOUSE
 
 Office of
				  the Press Secretary
 (Lisbon, Portugal)
 
  
					  
						 
						  | For
							 Immediate Release | May 30,
							 2000 |  PRESS BRIEFING BY
 A SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
				  OFFICIAL
 ON PRESIDENT'S MEETING WITH PRIME MINISTER BARAK
 
 Sheraton
				  Lisboa
 Lisbon, Portugal
 
 12:25 P.M. (L)
 
 MR. HAMMER:
				Good afternoon. We're going to have a briefing, on BACKGROUND, buy a senior
				administration official, who will provide you a few more details on this
				morning's meeting between the President and Prime Minister Barak.
 
 SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: I think you heard the President
				describe in general terms the meeting, let me just amplify a couple of points.
				Number one, the Secretary will go out for a short meeting after the Moscow
				summit. The main purpose of the meeting will be to follow up on today's
				discussion, have a chance to meet with Chairman Arafat, as well, see if there
				are differences that can be narrowed.
 
 I do not expect this to be her
				only trip. All along we have said that the President would be prepared to have
				a summit with the leaders if the basis was laid. And we've always felt that the
				Secretary would make a trip at a certain point to make a judgment as to whether
				or not we were at that juncture, where the basis had been laid. This particular
				trip is geared much more to follow up. We're not at a point, we don't see, we
				don't believe, where the basis is sufficiently laid to be able to go to that
				kind of a summit.
 
 That said, I think the President feels, again, that
				in the aftermath of this meeting what he sees is a very determined effort on
				Prime Minister Barak's part to seize the moment and to see if, in fact, from
				his standpoint it's possible to reach an agreement. He feels, based on his
				conversation on the phone yesterday with Chairman Arafat, that he, too, has a
				commitment also to try to seize the moment and end this conflict.
 
 I do
				want to say one thing and then I'll take your questions. We are dealing with
				the most fateful issues there are between Israelis and Palestinians. The issues
				of permanent status, borders, settlements, refugees, Jerusalem, security
				arrangements -- all of these issues go to the heart of identity, existence and
				security, and these are very tough negotiations, to be sure, given how profound
				the issues are. But there is no question that what we have seen is, at least in
				the negotiations, there is a chance to overcome the differences. But there's
				still an awful lot of hard work that will have to be done.
 
 I'll take
				questions.
 
 Q The President in his remarks called on both sides to do
				the things that they have not done in the past. Can you specifically lay out
				what these things are that they have not done in the past?
 
 SENIOR
				ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: Well, I mean, I think what he was getting at was
				specifically, you're trying now to deal with the permanent status issues. The
				fact is, when the Oslo process was laid out, it was envisioned that there would
				be a three-year period to negotiate permanent status issues.
 
 In fact,
				the discussions on permanent status have really been going on for about the
				last six months, and really only for about the last three to four weeks have we
				seen the kind of -- what I would describe as serious business going on. So what
				you're really dealing with at this point is being able to go to the heart of
				the matter. Oslo was built on taking a series of interim steps. Now we're
				dealing with the issues that go to the heart of the matter, and they're -- as I
				said, they're issues that deal with identity, with existence, and with
				security.
 
 Q Do you expect a new level of involvement by Albright? Will
				she be making repeated trips or --
 
 SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: No.
				I just wanted to make it clear that there might have been -- some might have
				assumed that this trip would be the trip that's designed to lay the basis, or
				determine whether the basis would be there. It's not that. I would expect that
				she will make at least another trip.
 
 Q How has the pullout from
				Lebanon, in your view, affected the state of these negotiations?
 
 SENIOR
				ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: Well, obviously, it's created a new reality. No matter
				how you slice it, in the Middle East there is a new reality. Israel is out of
				Lebanon. The U.N. is working right now to put itself in a position to be able
				to confirm that withdrawal. It will mean that one of the Security Council
				resolutions, as often cited, will have, in fact, been implemented. So it
				creates a new reality.
 
 For many, it shows that something like this,
				which many thought couldn't happen, can happen. And I think it is also a
				reminder that when, maybe, different parties on different sides say that
				there's a historic moment, this tends to crystallize the reality that there is
				a moment here -- that things can change, they can change in a very profound way
				on the ground.
 
 When we say there's a moment, one of the concerns we
				have is that there is a moment because both sides seem committed to wanting to
				overcome these very profound issues. But you know, moments don't last forever.
				And if they're not seized upon, the consequences of not seizing upon them are
				usually pretty significant. So I would just say that what Lebanon does is
				highlight that the realities can change in a very significant way. Israel had
				been in Lebanon since 1982. And for many, that was simply a fact of life. Well,
				it's clear that's no longer a fact of life.
 
 Q Does the President still
				believe that a September 13th target date is realistic?
 
 SENIOR
				ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: I believe that he does. I believe that he thinks it is
				possible to reach an agreement.
 
 I think he has no illusions. I think on
				the one hand, the President is quite hopeful, because he sees the level of
				intent on each side. On the other hand, he's quite mindful of how difficult
				these issues are for both sides, how difficult the decisions are for both
				leaders. I think it's why he -- he often times speaks about the importance of
				both sides having the vision and the courage to take these steps -- and it will
				take both, because these are enormously difficult. But there is a pathway
				that's there, and there is an intent that is there; now we'll have to see
				whether it's possible to translate that intent into a reality.
 
 Q Prior
				to today's meeting, Mr. Barak accused the Palestinian's of some foot-dragging
				in negotiations. Did Arafat give the President an indication that there is a
				hang-up here, or will negotiations proceed apace?
 
 SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
				OFFICIAL: The negotiations will proceed apace. Again, when you're dealing with
				what are very difficult issues, and you also have an environment that has been
				difficult the last few weeks, as well, it's not surprising that one side or the
				other will have a sense of grievances. And, in fact, the reality is, both sides
				have a sense of grievance.
 
 We're focused much more on, again, dealing
				with what we have seen in the negotiations that indicate that both sides are
				quite serious about trying to find ways not only to overcome the differences,
				but I will say, one thing that clearly characterizes this track, and has, is
				that both sides make much more of an effort to try to take account of the other
				side's needs, not only their own needs.
 
 Q When do you expect the
				meeting between the President and Chairman Arafat in Washington to occur?
 
 SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: The President said, "soon." We'll
				obviously have to find a date that's mutually convenient, soon. It will take, I
				would expect, fairly soon after the Secretary has seen him and after the
				President gets back.
 
 Q It's not scheduled yet?
 
 SENIOR
				ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: It's not scheduled yet because we'll have to work it
				out with Chairman Arafat.
 
 Q Would you expect in June, sometime within
				June?
 
 SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: When the President says "soon," I
				think he means soon.
 
 Q More and more reports are emerging that rather
				than 60 percent of the West Bank or the Jordan Valley, up to 90 percent is
				being put into play by Barak. Is that something that was discussed today? Is he
				offering that through President Clinton or signaling that he's prepared to
				offer much more land than anyone had anticipated from the Jordan Valley of the
				West Bank?
 
 SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: Well, I'm not going to go
				into the specifics, and I think what either the Israelis or the Palestinians
				offer at the negotiating table is something for them to talk about, not for us
				to talk about. But I would say that both sides have signaled to each other and
				to us that they're prepared to try to take account of the needs of the other,
				as well as meeting their own needs.
 
 I think it's fair to say that in
				Prime Minister Barak's case, he is very much governed by what Israel needs for
				security, but he's also mindful that if you're going to reach a deal you're
				going to have to make some painful decisions. And that he signaled to us and he
				certainly has signaled that to his own public.
 
 Q You said that
				Secretary Albright will go to the Middle East next week and that she'll have to
				make another trip before there will be a Camp David summit. Is that your
				thinking on the timing -- I mean, do you know, you're able to project that it's
				only going to take two Albright trips to the Middle East and then you're ready
				for a three-way summit?-
 
 SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: I'm not
				projecting yet. We know where we are right now. We know, on the one hand, that,
				in fact, they have made some headway, they have narrowed some differences. But
				we also know that the differences that remain are very significant. And more
				has to be done to create a kind of basis before you would go to the kind of
				summit that the President has in mind.
 
 How long that's going to take, I
				can't predict right now. What the exact nature of the process will be, I can't
				predict right now. What I can tell you is that this trip doesn't have that as
				its purpose. This trip will be geared towards following up on the discussion
				that was here, which the President found to be quite useful; following up both
				with Prime Minister Barak and with Chairman Arafat. And then Chairman Arafat
				will come see the President -- I use the word "soon" and it will be soon -- and
				then I would expect that in the aftermath of that, we will make a judgment.
 
 There are different ways we may proceed. It may involve the Secretary
				going back out; it may involve bringing the negotiators to a spot; it may
				involve me working with the negotiators. We'll see, based on the aftermath of
				these discussions where we think we are. But we basically feel there is a
				pathway here that offers promise, but there is still an awful lot of work that
				has to be done.
 
 Q Is she going to Syria, too?
 
 SENIOR
				ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: No.
 
 Q Does the President plan a follow-up
				phone call with Mr. Arafat today? And in the meeting with Mr. Barak, was there
				talk about the Israeli-Syria track?
 
 SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: On
				the first question, I don't believe so, because I think what the President
				envisions is that in terms of fully briefing the Chairman, the Secretary will
				be in a position to fully brief the Chairman on the meeting.
 
 Most of
				this meeting was devoted to the Israeli-Palestinian track, but there was at
				least a brief discussion about Syria, as well.
 
 Q To follow up to that,
				is there any reason to think that this latest turn of events might get the
				Syria track moving some, that it might -- President Assad might feel motivated
				to start talking more?
 
 SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: I think when you
				look at the Middle East and you see something that changes the landscape
				fundamentally, traditionally, there is a tendency for people to read into it
				the potential for danger. But the reality is there is also a potential for
				opportunity. So I think in the aftermath of the Israeli withdrawal from
				Lebanon, you have a new situation. If you have a new situation, that may also
				create new possibilities.
 
 We have never closed the door on the Syrian
				track. We've made that very clear. We have stayed in communication with the
				Syrians. They haven't closed the door and we haven't closed the door. So we
				continue to believe that there is a possibility there.
 
 Q What was the
				length of the meeting? How long was the meeting?
 
 Q -- confirmation of
				the report by the U.N. negotiator in Syria that the Syrians have accepted the
				Israeli withdrawal from Lebanon as per the U.N. report?
 
 SENIOR
				ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: The only thing that -- no. Right now, Terje
				Roed-Larsen is out there; what he is reporting and said publicly is that the
				Syrians have accepted the U.N. reports. That's what he said. We have not heard
				anything differently, but he is a very reliable reporter and we have no reason
				to question it.
 
 An hour-and-a-half.
 
 Q And is the Secretary
				going directly from Moscow?
 
 SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: I think
				she'll be going from Ukraine. She'll get in the night of the 5th.
 
 Q The
				night of the 5th. And will she go only to meet with Arafat, or will she also be
				going to Jerusalem to meet with --
 
 SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:
				She'll meet with Prime Minister Barak, as well as with Chairman Arafat.
 
 Q Can you tell us anything more about the meeting, itself; that is to
				say, were there certain of these fundamental issues that were discussed more
				than others, or are some showing more promise than others, other than just that
				Barak showed determination?
 
 SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: Well, I
				think it's fair to say that there was a discussion on permanent status and on
				the issues of permanent status. There was a discussion on sort of the status of
				where the negotiations are. And I think the Prime Minister gave the President
				his views.
 
 When the President meets with either the Prime Minister or
				Chairman Arafat at this stage, the effort is very much geared towards trying to
				understand not only exactly where things stand in the eyes of the respective
				leader, but also to probe and see what possibilities might exist in terms of
				narrowing gaps.
 
 Q There have been so many positive moments, and then
				hopes have been dashed. And you've seen just about all of them. Putting this
				into context --
 
 SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: I think that's right.
 
 Q Yes -- putting this into context for those of us who haven't seen
				them that way, how would you characterize this?
 
 SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
				OFFICIAL: I'm glad you asked that question, because oftentimes people say I
				like to use the word "context," and I didn't mention it, but you did.
 
 If you look at where we are in the sweep of things, historically, you'd
				have to say we've made a lot of headway, at least between Israelis and
				Palestinians. And I think the fact that we are dealing with permanent status
				issues now, and that we can look at these issues and think that, as the
				President said yesterday, that an agreement is possible, is itself an
				indication that things have moved.
 
 It's hard to sort of, on the one
				hand, state that things have moved, and then still relate to the reality that
				the gaps you still have to overcome are difficult. But the reason they're
				difficult is because of the nature of these issues. It's not an accident that
				the issues in Oslo were put off until the end -- although, as I said before, it
				was supposed to be three years to cover them.
 
 The hope was that you
				would create a kind of environment, a kind of climate, where when you came to
				deal with the permanent status issues, given the nature and the difficulty of
				them, that there would be such a stake in cooperation that it would be easier
				to resolve them than might have been the case otherwise.
 
 The fact is,
				we're in the seventh year of this process. And we don't necessarily have the
				kind of climate one would have envisioned, but we do have the kind of
				negotiations now that at least show that there may be a way to overcome the
				differences.
 
 I think what the President conveys is a sense of
				hopefulness based upon the sense that, in fact, we have come a long ways --
				again, measured against a historical context. But there's also no illusions
				that the kind of decisions that the two leaders are going to have to make are
				very, very difficult, because nobody can be satisfied completely on any of
				these issues, because to satisfy one side completely is to leave the other side
				dissatisfied.
 
 So you have a reality where both sides are going to have
				to find ways not only to make difficult decisions, but to be prepared to build
				bridges that presently don't exist, to overcome the differences. And if we
				didn't think there was a chance, we wouldn't be making the effort right now. We
				obviously think there is a chance, because the two sides themselves are making
				it very clear that they're prepared to do what they think is necessary to reach
				an agreement. Now, reconciling what they need and what the other side needs is
				what the challenge is all about right now.
 
 Q Did the President and
				Barak agree on the earmarking of $50 million to shore up the border with
				Lebanon?
 
 SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: The Israelis made a request to
				us a couple of weeks ago, and I think actually the President made the decision
				before this meeting that we would respond favorably to that request. The
				essence of that request is to use $50 million of existing FMF, but to allow the
				Israelis to spend it -- in a sense, use Israeli contractors for that. So
				they're allowed to use offshore procurement, and that represents, in a sense,
				lifting the threshold of what they're normally permitted to do in that regard.
 
 Q Did the President convey that message to the Prime Minister today or
				--
 
 SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: It had been conveyed previously, in
				the last -- in the past week, it was conveyed.
 
 Q What's your sense of
				the current domestic Israeli political situation and its impact on the peace
				process? Does Prime Minister Barak have the necessary maneuvering room, given
				that situation, to do what he has to do?
 
 SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
				OFFICIAL: Well, I think you're dealing with a Prime Minister who won a very
				large mandate personally in the last election. He clearly has made it
				unmistakable that his objective is to reach peace. He believes that he has
				sufficient support to do it. He is prepared to press ahead to do it. He is the
				best judge of what his politics make possible, and there is no question that
				what the President again heard today was a great deal of determination on his
				part to press ahead.
 
 And I believe that in many respects, his own
				views, if anything, have been bolstered by the withdrawal from Lebanon, because
				this is something -- he made a decision during the campaign that he would get
				out of Lebanon. He felt that it was in Israel's strategic interest to get out
				of Lebanon. He preferred to try to do it through negotiation, but when that
				wasn't possible by the time period that he had set, he went ahead and he did
				it.
 
 A major part of his rationale was that inertia was keeping Israel
				in a position that didn't serve its strategic interests. And he has also made a
				strategic judgment that there is an opportunity to make peace, and to end a
				100-year conflict. And his attitude, if anything, is as determined, if not more
				so, than what we've heard before.
 
 You asked the question about context
				before. I would say what the President saw with the Prime Minister is someone
				who is more convinced than ever that there is a moment that should be seized --
				at least, the effort has to be made to seize it. And I think the President's
				conversations, and his meetings with Chairman Arafat recently, have also
				convinced him that Chairman Arafat is coming from the same standpoint.
 
 As I said, what you see, in a sense, is the intent. What you see is
				also a choice. Now, the real question is, can we translate that intent and that
				choice into a reality?
 
 MR. HAMMER: All right, thank you very much.
 
 END 12:45 P.M. (L)
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